Authors |
Schmermund
A, Achenbach S, Budde T, Buziashvili Y, Forster A, Friedrich G, Henein
M, Kerkhoff G, Knollmann F, Kukharchuk V, Lahiri A, Leischik R, Moshage
W, Schartl M, Siffert W, Steinhagen-Thiessen E, Sinitsyn V, Vogt A, Wiedeking
B, Erbel R
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Abstract |
BACKGROUND:
Recent clinical trials have suggested that intensive versus standard lipid-lowering
therapy provides for additional benefit. Electron-beam computed tomography
provides the opportunity to quantify the progression of coronary artery
calcification (CAC) in serial measurements.
METHODS AND RESULTS: In a multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial,
471 patients (age 61+/-8 years) who had no history of coronary artery
disease and no evidence of high-grade coronary stenoses (>50% diameter
reduction) were randomized if they had > or =2 cardiovascular risk
factors and moderate calcified coronary atherosclerosis as evidenced by
a CAC score > or =30. Patients were assigned to receive 80 mg or 10
mg of atorvastatin per day over 12 months. Progression of CAC volume scores
could be analyzed in 366 patients. After pretreatment with 10 mg of atorvastatin
for 4 weeks, 12 months of study medication reduced LDL cholesterol from
106+/-22 to 87+/-33 mg/dL in the group randomized to receive 80 mg of
atorvastatin (P<0.001), whereas levels remained stable in the group
randomized to receive 10 mg (108+/-23 at baseline, 109+/-28 mg/dL at the
end of the study, P=NS). The mean progression of CAC volume scores, corrected
for the baseline CAC volume score, was 27% (95% CI 20.8% to 33.1%) in
the 80-mg atorvastatin group and 25% (95% CI 19.1% to 30.8%) in the 10-mg
atorvastatin group (P=0.65). CAC progression showed no relationship with
on-treatment LDL cholesterol levels.
CONCLUSIONS: We did not observe a relationship between on-treatment LDL
cholesterol levels and the progression of calcified coronary atherosclerosis.
Over a period of 12 months, intensive atorvastatin therapy was unable
to attenuate CAC progression compared with standard atorvastatin therapy.
The possibility remains that the time window was too short to demonstrate
an effect.
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